BY Brenden AckermanMarch 14, 2026
1 hour ago
BY 
 | March 14, 2026
1 hour ago

Maronite priest killed in Israeli shelling in southern Lebanon as Pope Leo XIV calls for peace

Father Pierre El-Rahi, a Maronite parish priest in the Christian village of Al-Qlayaa in southern Lebanon's Marjayoun district, was killed on Monday during Israeli military shelling amid ongoing operations against Hezbollah along the border. He was, by all accounts, exactly where he chose to be.

El-Rahi was reportedly among the priests who refused to leave the village after the Israeli military issued evacuation orders. When he heard that parishioners had been injured by a bombardment, he ran toward them. He did not make it back.

Pope Leo XIV remembered the slain priest during a general audience in St. Peter's Square on Wednesday, the same day as El-Rahi's funeral. The pontiff recounted what happened plainly:

"As soon as he heard that some of his parishioners had been injured by a bombardment, without any hesitation, he ran to help them."

He added a quieter petition:

"May his spilt blood be a seed of peace for Dear Lebanon."

Christians caught in someone else's war

The killing of a parish priest crystallizes a problem that has plagued Lebanon's Christians for decades: they are not combatants, yet they absorb the consequences of combatants operating in their midst.

The Lebanese Forces Party posted on X that elements from "the Party," a reference to Hezbollah, had "infiltrated the town of Al-Qlaia, which led to Israeli airstrikes on it." The result was the death of El-Rahi. This is the pattern. Hezbollah embeds itself among civilian populations, invites a military response, and the people left holding the bill are the ones who never signed up for the fight, as The Christian Post reports.

Richard Ghazal, director of the U.S.-based advocacy group In Defense of Christians, framed the stakes bluntly:

"Lebanon's Christians are not a party to this conflict, yet they once again find themselves forced to the front lines."

He described them as "caught between regional powers and armed actors" and urged the international community to ensure Lebanon does not become "another permanent battlefield in the Middle East."

Many Christian families from the southern border region have reportedly taken shelter in Beirut stadiums and schools. The village of Al-Qlayaa, where El-Rahi served, had already received Israeli evacuation orders. Some left. Some, like the priest, stayed.

Vatican diplomacy enters the frame

Lebanon's Foreign Minister Youssef Raggi has asked the Vatican to intervene on behalf of the Christian villages in the south. He detailed a phone conversation with Archbishop Paul Gallagher, the Vatican's Secretary for Relations with States, in a post on X.

"I asked the Holy See to intervene and mediate to help preserve the Christian presence in those villages, whose residents have always supported the Lebanese state and its official military institutions, and have never departed from this commitment."

That last clause matters. Raggi is drawing a sharp line between Lebanon's Christians and Hezbollah, a distinction that often gets lost in Western media coverage that treats "Lebanon" as a monolith. The Christian communities in the south aligned themselves with the Lebanese state and its army. Not with the Iranian-backed militia that operates as a state within a state.

According to Raggi, Gallagher affirmed that the Holy See is "making all the necessary diplomatic contacts to halt the escalation in Lebanon and to prevent the displacement of citizens from their lands." He also conveyed that Lebanon "has always been, and continues to be, in the prayers of His Holiness the Pope."

Prayers are welcome. Whether Vatican diplomacy can move the needle where the United Nations and decades of Security Council resolutions have not is another question entirely.

A region unraveling

The broader context is grim. The unrest across the Middle East has intensified following the death of Iran's supreme leader two weeks ago during U.S.-Israeli airstrikes. The power vacuum and retaliatory posturing have rippled outward, and southern Lebanon sits squarely in the blast radius.

Speaking to pilgrims in St. Peter's Square on March 1, the day after strikes that led to the deaths of top Iranian leaders, the Pope issued what amounted to a warning:

"Stability and peace are not built through mutual threats or through weapons … but only through reasonable, genuine, and responsible dialogue."

He also made what he called "a heartfelt appeal to the parties involved to assume the moral responsibility to stop the spiral of violence before it becomes an irreparable abyss."

On Wednesday, the Pope expanded his call:

"Let us continue to pray for peace in Iran and in the whole Middle East, in particular, for the many civilian victims, including many innocent children."

The cost of proximity

There is a reason Lebanon's Christians keep ending up in the crossfire, and it is not complicated. Hezbollah operates with impunity across Lebanese territory, embedding fighters and infrastructure in civilian areas, including Christian ones, precisely because it knows the resulting destruction will generate international pressure against Israel rather than against itself. It is a strategy that treats Lebanese civilians as shields and then mourns them as martyrs.

Israel has a right and an obligation to neutralize threats along its border. That is not in dispute. But the repeated destruction of Christian communities that have no affiliation with Hezbollah and have actively supported the Lebanese state highlights the impossible position these populations occupy. They cannot expel Hezbollah. They cannot stop Israeli strikes. They can only stay or flee.

Father El-Rahi stayed. He stayed when the evacuation orders came. He stayed when the shelling started. He ran toward his wounded parishioners because that is what a shepherd does.

Now his village mourns him, his church buries him, and the cycle that killed him continues without interruption.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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